SECURITY scanners that can see through passengers' clothing and reveal
details such as their sex organs, colostomy bags and breast size, are being installed in 10 US airports.

A random selection of travellers getting ready to board airplanes in
Washington, New York's Kennedy, Los Angeles and other key hubs will be
shut in the glass booths while a three-dimensional image is made of their
body beneath their clothes.

The booths close around the passenger and emit "millimetre waves" that
go through cloth to identify metal, plastics, ceramics, chemical materials
and explosives, according to the Transport Safety Authority.

While it allows the security screeners - looking at the images in a
separate room - to clearly see the passenger's sexual organs as well as
other details of their bodies, the passenger's face is blurred, TSA said.

The scan only takes seconds and is to replace the physical pat-downs
of people that is currently widespread in airports.

TSA began introducing the body scanners in airports in April, first
in the Phoenix, Arizona terminal.

The installation is picking up this month, with machines in place or
planned for airports in Washington (Reagan National and Baltimore-Washington
International), Dallas, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, Miami and Detroit.

The new machines have provoked worries among passengers and rights activists.

"People have no idea how graphic the images are," Barry Steinhardt,
director of the technology and liberty program at the American Civil Liberties
Union, said.

The ACLU said passengers expecting privacy underneath their clothing
"should not be required to display highly personal details of their bodies
such as evidence of mastectomies, colostomy appliances, penile implants,
catheter tubes and the size of their breasts or genitals as a pre-requisite
to boarding a plane".

Besides masking their faces, the TSA says on its website, the images
made "will not be printed stored or transmitted".

"Once the transportation security officer has viewed the image and resolved
anomalies, the image is erased from the screen permanently. The officer
is unable to print, export, store or transmit the image."

Lara Uselding, a TSA spokeswoman, said passengers were not obliged to
accept the new machines.

"The passengers can choose between the body imaging and the pat-down,"
she said.

TSA foresees 30 of the machines installed across the country by the
end of 2008. In Europe, Amsterdam's Schipol airport is already using the
scanners.